Senator Chris Murphy
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think what would happen is very quickly individuals and businesses would choose to go on Medicare because it just is better health care for lower price. And you'd have a very natural market-based transition away from what we have now to something that looks like, you know, Medicare for all.
I think what would happen is very quickly individuals and businesses would choose to go on Medicare because it just is better health care for lower price. And you'd have a very natural market-based transition away from what we have now to something that looks like, you know, Medicare for all.
I think what would happen is very quickly individuals and businesses would choose to go on Medicare because it just is better health care for lower price. And you'd have a very natural market-based transition away from what we have now to something that looks like, you know, Medicare for all.
And once Medicare had, you know, 60, 70% of the business, you know, frankly, the other companies probably couldn't operate. So that to me is the big idea that
And once Medicare had, you know, 60, 70% of the business, you know, frankly, the other companies probably couldn't operate. So that to me is the big idea that
And once Medicare had, you know, 60, 70% of the business, you know, frankly, the other companies probably couldn't operate. So that to me is the big idea that
you know, gets it to where we probably need to get to, but it does it through consumer and business choice, which is just a whole lot more politically easy than what Bernie is proposing, which is to just have a big legislative fight over requiring that everybody be on Medicare and banning private health care insurance.
you know, gets it to where we probably need to get to, but it does it through consumer and business choice, which is just a whole lot more politically easy than what Bernie is proposing, which is to just have a big legislative fight over requiring that everybody be on Medicare and banning private health care insurance.
you know, gets it to where we probably need to get to, but it does it through consumer and business choice, which is just a whole lot more politically easy than what Bernie is proposing, which is to just have a big legislative fight over requiring that everybody be on Medicare and banning private health care insurance.
There's a couple of good ideas out there that you guys haven't thought of yet. Well, several million.
There's a couple of good ideas out there that you guys haven't thought of yet. Well, several million.
There's a couple of good ideas out there that you guys haven't thought of yet. Well, several million.
Republican lawmakers in Minnesota want to, here in the state, add Trump derangement syndrome as an official mental illness.
Republican lawmakers in Minnesota want to, here in the state, add Trump derangement syndrome as an official mental illness.
So I'm making the case that government and policymakers are often shaping markets to make them work better so they can shape the markets to make Americans richer, their economic lives more stable, even safer if if they know what they're doing. And so this is a hidden history that we've got to pull on and recover if we're going to rebuild after the chaos of Trump in this moment.
So I'm making the case that government and policymakers are often shaping markets to make them work better so they can shape the markets to make Americans richer, their economic lives more stable, even safer if if they know what they're doing. And so this is a hidden history that we've got to pull on and recover if we're going to rebuild after the chaos of Trump in this moment.
It turns out... What? It's RIP, right? No, but I mean, for 40 years, people did believe that markets are self-regulating, that they would mostly take care of themselves, and they always used the I word, intervene. Government is there to intervene in markets. Only in catastrophes. Usually, like an emergency room, you know, you would come and you would fix things.
It turns out... What? It's RIP, right? No, but I mean, for 40 years, people did believe that markets are self-regulating, that they would mostly take care of themselves, and they always used the I word, intervene. Government is there to intervene in markets. Only in catastrophes. Usually, like an emergency room, you know, you would come and you would fix things.
But what I see in the history is that when things go well, government is structuring markets to make them work better. So you can take semiconductors, where just a few years ago we weren't making any advanced semiconductors in the United States. Now we're making the cutting-edge chips that are powering the iPhone.
But what I see in the history is that when things go well, government is structuring markets to make them work better. So you can take semiconductors, where just a few years ago we weren't making any advanced semiconductors in the United States. Now we're making the cutting-edge chips that are powering the iPhone.